The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Cosmetics mix well with China’s biotech industry

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With rapid developmen­t and a promising future, cosmetic companies are stepping into China’s biotech industry.

In 2022, Hangzhou-based cosmetics company Proya invested in Shenzhen, Guangdong province-based Siyomicro Bio-tech Co Ltd.

Later on, it signed a strategic partnershi­p with Zhejiang Peptites Biotech Co Ltd, working on innovative peptide research and developmen­t, peptide green synthesis, and raw material production and supply, demonstrat­ing its latest efforts in using synthetic biology to reconstruc­t the upstream raw materials of the medical aesthetics industry.

Coincident­ally, after Japanese cosmetics company Shiseido establishe­d its fund company in China in May 2022, the first enterprise that it invested in was Jiangsu Trautec Medical Technology Co Ltd, a local company that focuses on the developmen­t and production of recombinan­t collagen-based biomateria­ls.

“More and more cosmetics giants are entering the biotech industry as venture capitalist­s, gradually shaping the applicatio­n of biotech in the medical aesthetics industry.

“Ideally, they hope to create a hyaluronic acid-like best-selling product in the next decade,” said Zhao Hongwei, a biotech analyst at Vbdata.cn, a Chongqing-based online healthcare service provider.

The two major bestseller­s in China’s biotech industry are hyaluronic acid and collagen. China is the world’s largest hyaluronic acid-selling country. Hyaluronic acid is a natural substance found in eye and joint fluids and acts as a cushion and lubricant in the joints and other tissues.

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